jadette
Member
rtn is painful to watch. I to have had a couple die that way. Right now I'm having algae problems and of course I was messing with it and lost some livestock. Seems every summer I get an algae outbreak, pita.
I was thinking what's strange, remember when we traded some coral? I got a bubblegum milli. It lost the blue, slowly. It grew some and was doing good. I even fragged it. It now hasn't grown at all in like a year. Looks good, good polp extension but doesn't grow. I don't get it.
Interesting what you said about the blue tipped milli I traded with you. When I first acquired the colony, it practically doubled in size in a short period of time. It outgrew my then 75gallon tank, so I started fragging it like crazy. After I fragged it, it stopped growing completely. All the corals around it grew much faster and smothered it. So don't feel bad. I experienced the same thing.
I just realized that I said slow RTN. Which is just simply STN. My corals were STN-ing and not RTN-ing. Which, personally, sucks even more because at least with RTN, I can toss the coral and move on. With STN, I'm just watching it slowly die -and wondering at what point can I just toss it b/c I'm just sick of seeing almost dead corals in my tank.
Now that I think about it, I really did a poor job of aquascaping. I was so concerned with making the tank look decent right off the bat, that I wasn't thinking about how the corals can grow into the empty space. All I wanted to do was plug in dead space to get the shape I wanted from my coral mounds. The corals started growing in dense clumps, which made it difficult to frag.
Oh well. I guess it's not too late to change that. It would be nice to transition away from having a tank full of random brand name corals, and just stick with perhaps 5-6 very large colonies.
Hmmm.....

